INTELLIGENCER & LANCASTERIAN. GRO. SANDERSON, EDITOR A. SANDERSON, Associate. LANCASTER, PA., OOTOBER 7, 1856 CIRCULATION, 2100 COPIES I litrascatenox Place,- $2,00 per annum. FOR PRESIDENT, JAMES BUCHANAN, OP PENNSYLVANIA. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE, OF KENTUCKY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS arise R. Backalew, DISTRICT. , 14 Reuben Wilber, 15 George A. Crawford, 'l6 James Black, 17 11. J. Stable, 18 John D. Roddy, 19 Jacob Turney, { 2O J. A. J. Buchanan, 121 William Wilkins, James G. Campbell, { 23 I'. Cunningham, '24 John Beatly, 125 Vin'cent Phelps. 1 George W. Nebluger, 2 Pierce Butler, 3 Edward Waltman, 4 William H. Witte, 6 John McNair, • 13 John N. Brinton, 7 David Leary, 8 Charles Kneeler, 9 Jamee Patterson, 10 Isaac Bleaker, 11 F. W. Hughes, 12 Thomas Oaterbout, 13 Abraham Edinger, CANAL COMMISSIONER GEORGE SCOTT, of Columbia County SURVEYOR GENERAL JOHN ROWE, of Franklin County AUDITOR GENERAL JACOB FRY, Jr., of Montgomery County DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET • Congress. Hon. Isaac E. Hiester, City Assembly. George G. Brush, Manor, Jesse Reinhold, West Cecelia,. H. H. Breneman, Eden, William Patton, Columbia, William T. McPhail, StrasLurg Bor District Attorney, J. B. Amwake, City. Associate Judge. A. L. Henderson, Salisbury County Commissioner John B. Erb, Clay. Prison Inspectors Henry Shelly, Rapho, William Pickel, Bart Directors of the Poor. John Roberta, Earl, Frederick Kreamer, U. Leacook County Surveyor Daniel Fulton, Pequea. Auditor Amos A. Hawke, Paralise ONE UNION! ONE COUNTRY!! ONE CONSTITUTION AND ONE DESTINYM - ,i , :,..'‘'' ,1 ,..ii::/.11,, , ...::,; . i .5... , , , .‘, , y,‘,1 .... ~.w GRAND MASS ME P:TI G 5 OF THE FRIENDS OF BUCHANAN and BRECHINRIDCH in Lancaster County DEMOCRATS AROUSE! COME ONE! COME ALL ! Let every Township and Borough be repre sented. Getout your Wagons and Teams. Come with Music and Banners. Let there be a grand gathering of all the Democrats and Consti tution-loving men in the county—of all who de light in the perpetua tion of those great principles upon which the Re public was founded. THE, DEMOCRACY of LANCASTER COUNTY, and all friendly to the election of BUCHANAN and BRECKINttIDGE, and the Demo cratic State and County 'l'ickets, will hold a Grand Mass Meeting, in tlie! J City of Lancas ter,-(the home of BUCHANAN,) at 10 o'clock, A. M., on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER Bth, 1856. The Democracy of the surrounding counties, are cordially invited to meet with us on . that occasion; and we expect a large representa tion from our sister counties. The Committee of Arrangements will spare no exertions to make this one of the best regulated meetings that has ever convened in this section of the State. ter A correspondence has been opened with some of the most distinguished speakers in the country, and favorable answers have already been received from several of them. The following named gentlemen are confident ly expected : HOWELL COBB, of Georgia. JAMES B. CLAY, of Kentucky. WILLIAM PRESTON, " C. R. BUCKALEW, of Pennsylvania. E. B. SCHNABEL, WILLIAM B. REED, JOSIAH RANDALL, SAMUEL W: BLACK, " WILLIAM H. WITTE, " GEORGE R. RIDDLE, of Delaware, WILLIAM ALLEN, of Ohio, and several others. H. B. SWARR, Chairman Co. Com. 111. Turn out Democrats—in town and oountry—to the Great Mass Meeting TO MORROW. Democratic Head Quarters We are authorized to announce, by the the chairman of the County Committee, that the Democratic Head Quarters on the night of the October election, will be at the Hotel of Cox & BARNETT, near the Railroad, where our country friends are requested to report on the night of the election. Get Your Tickets The Democratic tickets are now ready for distribution. Our friends from the different districts will please call on Mr. SWARR and obtain their supplies. va. 64 JACK SCUTCHER'S " communication, giving an account of the discussion at Quar ryville; i unavoidably left out this week. It is atter impossible for us to publish one-half of the c mmunications, tic., that we are daily receivin and therefore our friends must bear with us• e communication above alluded to will not spoil by holding over till next week. Messrs. Clay and Webster We take great pleasure in announcing to our friends throughout the county, that both JAMES B. CLAY, Esq., (son of Henry Clay ( ) and FLETCHER WEBSTER, Esq., (son of Daniel Webster,) will be at our Mass Meeting in this City, on to-morrow, and address the people on the great issues involved in the present contest. Who Employs Darkles Not the Democratic Mayor and Democratic members of the City Council, as the Express would have the public believe ;—but Mr. ROBERT H. LONG, a Fremont man, who, as a member of the Council and Chairman of the Committee that has the work in charge—he is the man who employed, on his own responsi bility, a Negro to do the public work which the Express wants to charge upon the Demo cratic authorities. sea Mr. ROBERTS denies having signed the Fremont circular published in our last issue, and says that his name was used without his knowledge or consent Who, then, perpetra ted the forgery? Mr. Ronzeve should have the matter investigated, and let the public know who did it. BEWA''E OF SPURIOUS TICKETS. Democrats—friends of BUCHANAN in Lan caster County—look well to your tickets on Tuesday next, and see that the right names are upon them, and thnt they are all correctly spelled. Tha Black Republicans will resort to every foul means to deceive the people, and already there are thousands of spurious tickets in circulation all over the county. Read your tickets carefully, and see that the following names (all friends of BUCHANAN) are upon them: STATE OFFICERS CANAL COMMISSIONER George Scott. SURVEYOR GENERAL. John Rowe. Wilson McCandless AUDITOR GENERAL Jacob, Fry, jr. CONGRESS. Isaac E. Hiester. ASSEMBLY. George G. Brush, Jesse Reinhold, Henry H. Breneman, William Patton, William T. McPhail. C(JUNTY OFFICERS DISTRICT ATTORNEY Jacob B. Amwake. ASSOCIATE JUDGE. A. Lightner Henderson. COUNTY COMMISSIONER. John B. Erb. PRISON INSPECTORS. Henry Shelly. William 'Fickel. DIRECTORS OF THE POOR John Roberts, Frederick Kreamer. COUNTY SURVEYOR Daniel Fulton. Amos A. Hauke. Election on Tuesday Next Are the Democrats—are the friends of JAMES BUCHANAN all ready for the election on Tuesday next, the 14th inst. Go to the Polls early, and see to it that every Buchanan vote in the county is polled for the Democratic State Ticket—for These are all true Union men, of excellent moral character—competent and deserving— in every way the superiors of their Black Re publican Abolition opponents, Messrs. COCU RAN, PHELPS and LAPORTE. . Every friend of time Union should vote the Democratic State ticket, as its success will settle the Presidential question. The Extra Compensation We give below a list of the yeas and nays, on the final passage of the extra compensa tion bill, which added about one million of dol lars to the expenses of Congress for the last session of Congress alone, from which it will be seen that ANTHONY E. ROBERTS not only voted for the bill, but that.his rote decided it. Had he cast his vote in the negative, the bill would have been defeated. We copy from the Congressional Globe, page 2161, as follows: Ykas--Messra. Aiken, Ball, Barbour ' Barclay, Headley S. Bennett, Benson, Bishop, Boyce, Brooks, Broom, Buffington) James 11. Campbell, Cufuthers, Chaffee, Bayard Clarke, Ezra Clark, Howell Cobb, Comins, Covode, Damrell, Henry Win. ter Davis, Timothy Davis, Dean, Denver, Dickson, Durfe, Edwards, Eustis, Evens, Florence, Foster, Henry M. Fuller, Thomas J. D. Fuller, Giddings, Gilbert, Greenwood, Robert B. Hall, J. Morrison Harris, Thomas L. Ilarris, Harrison, Herbert, Hickman, Thomas It. Horton, Howard, Hughstou, Kelly, Kelsey, King, Knapp, Kunkel, Lindley, Mace, A. K. Marshall, H. Marshall. S. e. Marshall, Maxwell, McQueen, Killian Miller, Millwaid, Moor, Norton, Mordecai Oliver, Her, Pearce, Peck, Pelton, Pennington, Perry, Pringle, Purviance, Iticaud, hollillas, Sage, Savage, Scott, Seward, S. A. Smith, CLiieeL:, Swope, Thorington, Thurston, Tratton, Trippe, Tyson, Vail, Vol Wakeman, Walbridge, IValker, Warner, C. C. IVashburne, Watson, Welch, Wells, Wheeler, Whitney, Williams and Woodworth -IW. Nava—Messrs. Albright, Allison, Billingliurst, Bliss, Bo- cock, Bowie, Bradshaw, Branch, Brenton, Burnett, Cad walader, John P. Campbell, Lewis L. Campbell, Carlile, Cookie, Clawn,n, Chi:minim, IV. It. W. Cobb, (Max, Cragin, Craige, Cumback, Lica ' Dodd, Dowdell, Edie, Edmundmn, Elliott, Emrie, English, Etheridge, Faulkner, Flaglor, Gal loway, Goode, Granger, Grow, Harlem Haven, Ilulloway, V. B. Horton, Houston, G. W. Jones, Kidwell, Knight, Knowlton, Knox, Lane, Leiter, Leteher, Lumpkin, Matte son, McCarty, McMullin, S. Miller, Morgan, Murrill, Mott, Murray, Andrew Oliver, Parker, l'ettit, Phelps, pike, Por ter, Powell, Puryear, Quitman, Ready, Richardson, Ritchie. Ruffin, Sandidge, .app, Sherman, Shorter, Simmons, W. Sinith, - Wm. R. Smith, Spinner, Stanton, Stepimus, Stewart, Stranahan, Talbott, Tappan, Taylor, Todd, Underwood, Wade, Waldron, E. B. Wasliburne, Israel Washburn°, Watkins, Winslow, Wood, Woodruff, D. B. Wright and John V. Wright-7U. Mr. Buchanan in the War of 1.51:4 The land warrants for 160 acres of land each, fur military service rendered at Balti more in 1814, have just been issued by the Department to Dr. F. A. MuttLEN-BERG and EMANUEL C. REIGART, Esq., of this city.— These gentlemen both served with Mr. Br- CHANAIsr, in Capt. Shippen's Company of Vol unteers who marched to the defence of Balti more in 1814, all of whom continued in the army until honorably discharged by the Gov ernment. Mr. BUCHANAN'S name was the first enrolled in the company, and he is also entitled to a land warrant, but declines ap plying. We mention the above facts merely to give the lie to the story started by the opposition that Mr. BUCHANAN never marched to Balti more in defence of his country. Row this World is given to Lying i We clip the following telegraphic despatch es in the North American and Daily News, of Thursday last, in reference to the miserable Black Republican abortion, in this city, on Wednesday. Such extravagant falsehoods and misrepresentations are almost too silly to notice : From the North American. Republican Sleeting in Lancaster. LANCASTER { Oct. 1. There was a grand mass meeting of the friends of Fremont and Dayton, held in this city to day, being the largest and most enthu• elastic gathering ever convened in this part of the State. Delegations were present from all parts of the county, and there were over one thousand carriages in the procession, one hun dred six horse teams, and five hundred on horseback, besides eight bands of music.— Gov. Hamlin, of Maine, and others, addressed the multitude. The enthusiasm was very great. And a letter writer for the same paper esti mates the number of country people alone at the meeting at over fifteen thousand! This is even a whopper of more gigantic dimensions than the preceeding lie. But hear the Daily News : [Special Despatch to the Daily News.] The Union County Convention. LANCASTER, Oct. I.—The Union County Mass Meeting, held in this city to-day to rat ify the Union County and State Tickets, num bered at least twenty thousand persons. This county will give the State Union ticket from six to seven thousand majority. Da. Comment on the above is unnecessary. We are satisfied now that the leaders of the Nigger-Worshipping party of this county have long since "thrown conscience to the devil." Stir Be it remembered that Bartholomew Laporte, who is for Fremont and is on the op position State ticket for Surveyor. General, that he, (Laporte,) while a member of the last Legislature of Pennsylvania, voted in favor of Mr. Smith's bill, giving the right of suffrage to negroes, in the face of that provision of the State Constitution that none but white citi zens should enjo'y this sacred right. la. A large and enthusiastic Democratic meeting was held last Friday evening, the 3d inst., at White Oak Stras burg township. It was addressed by the Hon. John Apple. ton, of Maine, in a powerful and effective speech. He was followed by A. J. Neff, Esq., Dr. J. K. Baub, B. F. Ibach, Wm. Patton, H. H. Breneman and W. T. McPhail, in an able manner. All is well in that locality. • *st... The Democracy of Marietta raised a tine Hickory pole in that Borough, on the 27th ult. The meeting was ably and effectludy address. d by Thomas J. Albright, CYrtis S. Haldeman, J. G. Peters, Henry Shaffner, Charles Holly and Octavio Pallor, Ewa: AUDITOR Canal Commissioner, GEORGE SCOTT. Surveyor General, JOHN ROWE. Auditor General, JACOB FRY, Jr The Extra Pay Question A futile and lame attempt is made in the last Independent Whig to excuse Mr. ROBERTS' vote for the extra compensation bill, on the ground that members of -former Congresses voted themselves $l5OO worth of books apiece. which Mr. ROBERTS did not get. Even if this were true, the figures show that Mr. ROBERTS still voted himself about $l7OO more than he would have received under the old law, books and all included. And if Mr. JoRN COTODE, (a Black Republican member of Congress who who also voted for the extra compensation,) who publishes a calculation for the long ses sion, had added another for the short session which commences on the first Monday of De cember next, *this fact would have been appar ent—but it did not suit his purpose to tell the whole truth ; he suppressed a material part - of it. But the book excuse is neither true in letter nor spirit. It was the practice in Congress for many years to vote the members, on their f irst entry into the House, and once only in their Congressional career, whether elected for one term or ten, an assortment of books, compris ing State papers, Diplomatic Correspondence, Debates, &c., costing the government about $l,OOO. These were given to qualify members for an intelligent discharge of their duties, for reference, and for the use of their constitu ents as well as themselves. It was considered DISGRACEFUL AND A BREACH OF TRUST to sell them. Mr. WESTER voted against appropriating these books, but they were sent him from Washington, and he re tains them as well for the use of the people of Lancaster county as himsell. If, however, Mr. Roberts had voted himself the $l,OOO worth of books instead of the $3200 EXTRA PAY, the book business would have ended with his first term. No re-election would have brought more books; but under his own law, every re-election brings $3200 more additional compensation. If he should be elected again, he will_ have at the end of his second term $6,400 cash, instead of the books which are of little use to any other than an active politician. The present Congress has already voted itself as much in books as any that went be fore it, even charging the $lOOO lots to former Congresses. But is there anything to prevent the members of the present Congress from voting themselves these very books in addition to the Extra Compensation? True, they did not do so last session, but they may do so next. And certainly there is little to hope from gen tlemen who solicited an office at MIGHT DOLLARS DAY, and AFTERWARDS VOTED THEMSELVES MICILIVIIIEN. More of It! Mr. ROBERTS' vote carried the extra com pensation bill, which was passed, by 100 yeas to 99 nays. Had he voted in the negative the bill would have been lost. Under his own vote, therefore, Mr. ROBERTS receives for his term : Pay, Mileage, Under his implied contract with the people, whom he agreed to serve for $8 per diem, and which was deemed amply sufridcent by all his predecessors; he would have received— For the first Session, which lasted 259 days, at $8 per day, For the second Session, which can only last 91 days, at $8 per day, Mileage as above, Taking this from the other, leaves a differ ence of exactly $3,200, which Mr. ROBERTS voted into his own pocket, beyond what he undertook to serve the people for, and to which he had nut even the shadow of an honest claim Again, at the time of the passage of this bill, Mr. Roberts had actually served the first session of his term s under the old rate of eight dollars a day. At the end of the session, therefore, there was due him from the government, as already seen, $2,072 ; instead of which he voted him self $3,000, being $928 EXTRA BACK PAY FOR TIME ACTUALLY SERVED UNDER IRE FORMER Three Thousand Dollars a year would be a large compensation for the whole time of our best men ; but the duties of members of Con gress occupy on an average only half the year, and Mr. Roberts rendered no services which any other intelligent citizen of Lancaster county could not have performed as well.— Dividing this pay among the days of each year give sMr. Roberts TWELVE DOL LARS for every day of the First Session, and THIRTY-THREE DOLL IRS for every day of the Second Session, Sundays included! But this is nut all, Mr. Roberts still finds time to attend to his duties as Treas urer of the Lancaster Savings institution, for which he receives $l2OO per annum. So that the people do not even get his whole time during the sessions of Congress for Three Thousand Dollars a year. Observe too, the difference between the pay Mr. Roberts is willing to take from the Sav ings Institution and what he helps himself to out of the U. S. Treasury. He agreed to give the Institution his WHOLE TIME for $l2OO a year, but will not devote HALF HIS TIME to the Unitec! States for $3,000 a year. There is some difference between getting pay from others and paying oneself: Mr. Roberts did not vote this Extra pay to himself alone, but also to more than Three Hundred other Representatives, Senators and Delegates in Congress. The entire amount of this Extra Compensation at the late session of Congress will appear by the following extracts from the Appropriation Bill : " For additional compensation and mileage " of Senators $178.128. "For additional compensation and mileage " of Representatives and Delegates $773.- 432." It has been seen that the additional com pensation of each Member amounts to $3,200. Continue this rate for the future, and every Congress will cost the General Government in round numbers $1,000,000 more than heretofore. IT WAS EMPHATICALLY MR. ROBERTS' OWN VOTE THAT TRANSFERRED THIS MILLION FROM THE U. S. TREASURY INTO THE POCKETS OF HIM SELF AND HIS ASSOCIATES ISAAC E. HIESTER is OPPOSED TO THIS INCREASE OF COMPENSATION, AND STANDS PLEDGED TO VOTE FOR ITS REPEAL.— Having once served the country in Congress for eight dollars a day, without complaint, he is ready and willing to do so again. The is sue between him and Mr. Roberts is fairly made. Will the people choose ISAAC E. HIESTER AT EIGHT DOLLARS A DAY, or AN THONY E. ROBERTS AT A RATE WHICH AVERAGES EIGHTEEN DOLLARS FOR EVERY DAY OF THE TWO SESSIONS. SS— Cr. Cutter, a Yankee lecturer on Kan sas troubles, at a recent fusion meeting in Montpelier, Vt„ let the cat out of the bag in such a way that none but the wilfully wicked or hopelessly blind, can fail to see the animal. He said— "IF YOU WOULD CARRY THE ELEC TION NEXT NOVEMBER KEEP BLOODY OUTRAGES IN KANSAS BEFORE THE EYES OF THE PEOPLE: YOU HAVE NO OTHER PLANK. SETTLE THIS QUES TION AND YOU ARE DEFEATED." For the Intelligeocer and Laueastertan A Word of Warning: and Counsel from a Working Man to the Farmers, Meehan les and other Working Men, in relation to the present state of parties in the United States. As an old Mechanic having an interest in the welfare of the Republic, and more anxious about having the country well governed, than about what particular party shall control its destinies, I have looked on with deep solici tude, for the result of the contest for the Presidency, now going on. I am no office holder or office seeker, and would not accept office under any State or National Administration.—l • prefer to be in dependent, and to support myself and family by my honest calling. I am no slaveholder, no friend to slavery as a system, nor do I desire the further extension of slavery—and yet lam not willing to enslave the white race, in an attempt to confer freedom on the black. For a quarter of a century I have been an observer of the attempts periodically made, to get up sectional agitation fur political pur poses—and men who have cared less for the slave than fur their own advancement, have used this question of slavery as a stalking horse, and have flooded Congress with peti tions, have desecrated the pulpit, and profaned God's holy Sabbath, by attempts to alienate one section of the country from another, by appeals to the well known anti-slavery senti ment of the people of the free States. When the occasion has passed, a dead calm has ensued, and the hubby has been laid by, until it should be found necessary again to bring it out, to compass the attainment of place and power. And thus from time to time, the public mind and heart has been stirred by ambitious men, who regarded as little the warnings of Wash ington's Farewell Address against sectional and geographical parties, as they did the Sa viour of Mankind, "the Prince of Peace" who said "a house divided against itself cannot stand." All the time this agitation has been going on, the hearts of our countrymen have become more and more estranged. and further re moved from that spirit of compromise and conciliation, in which our noble fathers laid the foundations of this government, and built up this splendid temple of Constitutional lib erty. You are well aware that this Union or Con federation of States, could not have been formed without the clear and explicit acknowl edgement of the perfect equality of all the Slates, and the equal rights of the citizens of all the States—that they were equtil, and not unequal parties, in this great co partnership of inde pendent sovereignties. The same admission of equality—the recognition of equal rights—the same affection and confidence, are indispensa bly necessary to the continued maintenance of this great Union. T hese States can never be kept together by force, and I do nut see how we can long enjoy a liberty and Union worth the name, unless we shall agree to adopt the sentiments of Justice McLEAN and of Gen. CAss in his " Nicholson Letter," and leave the entire con- trol of the question of slavery and freedom with the people who shall occupy the Territories, procured by the common treasure or blood of the people qf all the States—and remove this disturbing element entirely from the Halls of Congress. This was the ground taken by Hon. Messrs. CABS, CLAY, WEBSTER and FOOTE, in the adjustment measures of 1850, and set forth in the Platforms of the two great National parties, in the contest of 1852; for the candidates of the Whig and Democratic parties, stood upon the platform of Congressional non interference, and for them nearly the whole of the American people east their suffrages in 1852. This adjustment, made by the patriotic men (some of whom are gone to mingle in the soci ety of the fathers of the Republic,)was resisted fur weeks and months by most of the leaders of the present sectional party—and it is for the honest and conscientious working men of the country, to determine whether they will follow the lead of the patriots who quieted the agitation in 1850 so far as they were able, or the lead of those who, at the very time of the passage of those healing measures, vowed be fore God and the country, that they would keep up the agitation, and seek their repeal by every possible means, and who issued a pamphlet from the Capitol, addressed to the pulpits, and churches of the North, dated upon the Sabbath, and bearing date three days ear lier than the proposition to amend the Ne braska Bill by the annulment of the geograph ical line of 36-30--thus showing a settled purpose to keep up agitation and, if possible, to defeat that Bill as they had attempted in 1850 to defeat the Bill to organize the Terri torial Governments ot Eutaw and New Mexico. This was the pamphlet, in response to which the celebrated and anomalous Protest, in God's name, of the 3000 New England clergymen reached IVashington—thousands of honest, well-meaning people have been made to believe that the agitation arose from the prop osition to annul, or abrogate, the Missouri restriction, but the records will show that the agitation took precedtrice, in the order of time, to the proposition to `amend the Bill, by re moving that restriction. The forebodings of the immortal author of the Declaration of Independence expressed in 1820 and 1823 in regard to that geographical line, bids fair to be realized, if this agitation is longer continued—l refer to the language of Mr. Jefferson's letter to Wm. Short; of April 13, 1820, in relation to the passage of the Missouri Bill: " The old schism of Federal and Republican threatened nothing, because it existed in every State and united them together by the frater nalism of party. But the coincidence of a marked principle, moral and political, with a geographical line, once conceived, I fear never more would be obliterated from the mind.— That it would be recurring on every occasion, and renewing irritations until it would kindle such mutual moral hatred as to render separ ation preferable to eternal 'discord. I have been among the most sanguine, in believing that our Union would be of long duration. I now doubt it much, and see that event at no great, distance, and the direct consequence of this question." * "My only comfort and confidence is, that I shall not live to see this ; and I envy not the present generation the glory of throwing away the fruits of their fathers' sacrifices of life and fortune, and of rendering desperate the experiment which was to decide, whether man is capable of self gov ernment. This treason against human hope, will signalize their epoch in future history, as the counterpart of the model of their predeces sors." In Mr. Jefferson's letter to John Holmes, of Maine, dated Monticello, April 22nd, 1820, just nine days after the above, he holds the following striking language in regard to the passage of the Bill drawing a line on the map for freedom and slavery, known as the Mis souri restriction : " But this momentous question, like the fire bell in the night, awakened and filled me with terror. I considered it at once the knell of the Union. It is hushed, indeed, for a mo ment, but this is a reprieve only, nut a final sentence. A geographical line coinciding with a marked principle, moral and political, once conceived and held up to the angry passions of men, will never be obliterated, and every new irritation, will markit deeper and deeper. * * * * * * * Of one thing I am certain, that as the passage of the slaves from one State to another would not make a slave of any human being, who would not be so without it, so their diffusion over a greater surface would make them in dividually happier, and proportionably facili tate the accomplishment of their emancipation by dividing the burthen on a greater number of coadj u tors. An abstinence, too, from this act of power, would remove the jealousy excited by the un dertaki❑g of Congress to regulate the condition of the different descriptions of men composing a State. This certainly is the exclusive right of the State, which nothing in the Constitution has taken from them, and given to the General Government." And yet, small politicians have told the country in effect, that the sage of Monticello was no statesman—that the repeal of this measure which he considered as putting the Union in jeopardy, and worsting the slave has been a "Pandora's box" filling, the land with all manner of evil. That wicked and designing men now, as in 1820, have taken occasion to agitate the public mind and chafe the bonds of the Union, is undeniable, but this was no legitimate or necessary result of the repeal of the Missouri line. And Mr. Jeffer son, in his letter to Lafayette, Nov. 4th, 1823, throws some light upon the designs of the ag itators of his lime; and perhaps their illustri ous successors, who now foment strife, may see their picture drawn by the hand of him who drew the Declaration of Independence. To Lafayette he says—" On the eclipse of feder alism with us, although not its extinction, its leaders got up the Missouri question, under the false front of lessening the measure of sla very, but with a real view of producing a ge- ogrzphicall division of parties, and thus en sure their, r e Presitient. The people-. f the North went Li n.ll i,,r the snare, following their leader- with a zeal truly moral and laudalile, until they became sensible that they w- e injuring. instead of aiding the real interests .if the slaves; that they had been used merest :to nsils f•r electioneering pur pose- and tit at tr ck of bypwrisy then, fell as Gui.:kly as it had been gotten up." lei* the honest airus of toil look up.in this picture, at then turn and tear off the mask by which the leaders of the present fiction, attempt to rover their real intentions—i. e. "pr.dueing a •;.eographical division of parties, to ensure their next President"—and not. out of any desire to benefit the slave, itraid eman cipation. As regards the mere question of political power in this country, the free States have it, and must always have it, as any sensible and candid man may easily perceive, ,when it is considered that the Territory now covered by the Free States, and the Wilmot proviso, is one thousand square miles larger than the Territory covered by the Slave States—and that more than two thirds of the white popu lation of the country ocogpy the Territory now acknowledgely free. With this large prepon derance of territory and population, it is ut terly impossible that the balance of power should not be with the free States. _ - If Kansas should agree to tolerate slavery when she forms a State Constitution, (which is altogether unlikely) Nebraska, Eutaw, Or egon, Washington, Minnesota and New Mexico will beyond doubt ask admission into the Uni on as free States—thus giving six free States and 12 United States Senators fur one slave State and 2 Senators. A man who can look at these facts and still fear for the cause of freedom, might well be frocked and set down in company with the well meaning, but timid old ladies who consented to believe that the election of Mr. Jefferson in 1800 would lead to the burning of their Bibles, and with the purblind of the stronger sex, who were fright ened from their propriety by the acquisition of Louisana from the French by Mr. Jefferson in 1803—and in agony at the annexation of Texas in 1845. Mr. Jefferson was well aware that the Mis souri line of 1820 violated a solemn compact made by our Government with France 17 years before—for the Treaty of Cession by which we obtained Louisiana, by its 3rd Article, bound the United States to protect the people of that country known us Upper and Lower Louisana, in their property—l quote the words of the Treaty, Art., 3d: "The inhabitants of the ceded Territory shall be incorporated in the Union of the United States, and admitted as soon as possible, according to the principles of the Federal Constitution, to the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages and immunities, of citizens of the United States, and, in the mean time, they shall 'be maintained and pro tected in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property, and the religion which they profess." See the United States Statutes at large, Vol. 8, Page 202. In an able article by that wise and pure man, Judge McLean, published in Gales' " National Intelligencer " at Washington, Dec. 1847—he says, "In the Treaty of Cession of Louisan°, the United States bound them selves to protect the property of the citizens. Slaves in that Territory were considered as property, and were within the Treaty." And in view of the solemn obligations of this Government with France, Congress in 1820 had no more right to put the people of the Territory of Louisana under political dis abilities fur their property, than they had for their religion. And it is high time, that Congress had ceased to exercise dou'btful powers—and that this festering and irritating sore growing out of slavery - agitation, had been healed by the clear recognition, North and South, East and West of the doctrine of popular sovereignty— the " powers not granted to Congress by the Constitution, are reserved to the States and. the people." I look over the persons now engaged in this great battle on which depends more than " the fate of Cmsar and of Rome "—and I ask how can this tempest be arrested, which puts in peril the ship of State, and threatens to drive the Constitution on to a lee-shore? How can the ark of our Union and liberties be snatched from the crater of this volcano ? And I espy among the persons of this contest, a staid, sober, discreet and long-tried statesman, who has been always equal . to every task his coun try assigned him, at home or abroad—who had the confidence of Jackson, and stood by him in his great war of capital against labor, when the men who now glorify Jackson were as much addicted to villifying him, as they are now to misrepresenting his original friends, and who were more iu earnest then in the cause of the money power, than they are now in the cause of fanaticism, and who then were on the side of treason to the rights of honest labor, as they are now to the equality of the States, and the people of the several States. •LANES BUCHANAN has had the manly frank ness to avow himself upon all the great ques tions now agitating the public mind and heart —and he is the only candidate, so far as I have been able to perceive, that has openly avowed his opinions on questions most vital to the peace of the country, and to the maintenance of the Union and the Constitution. And as I desire, with the great body of the working men of our great country, nothing but to see the greatest good of the greatest possible number, secured by a wise administration of the Constitution and laws, so that like the dews of Heaven, the blessings of good Government may fall alike on all—l shall go for the man whose private and personal character is above reproach, and whose public record is legibly written upon the pages of his country's history for the last thirty years. A JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN DEMOCRATIC MEETINGS There was a glorious turn out of the Democracy at the "Green Tree," in Bart township, on Wednesday last.— There were at least one thousand of the hardy sons of Bart, Coleraine, Little Britain, Eden, Strasbtirg, Salisbury Sadsbury, Drumore and Fulton townships present—accom panied with appropriate banners and flags. The Strasburg Brass Band was there also, and enlivened the scene by their excellent music. The meeting was organized by the appointment of the following officers, viz: President—Thomas S. Wllvaine. Vice Presidents—C.l. Joseph B. Baker, Abraham M'C,on nel, James Patterson, Dr. S. B. Fox, Dr. John Martin, Wil liam Dungan, Clarkson Jeffries, James 11. Houston, William Hayes and Robert Evans, Esqrs. Secretaries—William M'Canna, R. B. Patterson, Robert Montgomery, 11. U. Breneman and Isaac Sharp, Esqrs. The speakers were Hon. John K. Findlay, of Philadelphia, Hon. John Hickman, of West Chester, Thomas C. Fields, Esq., of New York, Capt. Joseph A. Yard, of Trenton, N. J., and Col. Reah Frazer, of Lancaster—all of whom acquitted themselves with great eloquence and power, and with a happy effect in favor of the Colon and the Constitution. Our friends elsewhere may confidently expect a glorious vote for the Democratic State and County tickets, from that portion of the county represented at the "Green Tree" meeting. There was a glorious meeting of the friends of Bu chanan and Breckinrldge, at Rawlinsville, on Saturday afternoon last. The following named officers were appointed, viz: President, Henry Busk, Esq.: Vice Presdents, Joseph 'Lerner, John Hildebrand, John Wentz, Michael Winters; Secretaries, H. L. Thompson, David Laird. . The meeting was addressed in a few appropriate remarks by William Ellmaker, Esq., of this city, (an old line Whig) assigning his reasons for being on the side of Buchanan, the Union and the Constitution, The meeting was further addressed by Capt. Geo. Sanderson, Hon. John Appleton, of Maine, Col. Roak Frazer and Dr. John K. Raub. The speakers were repeatedly and enthusiastically cheered and every thing betokened a glorious revolt in Mastic township on Tuesday next. The Infidels Were Here! The great high priest of the Abolition party, ANSON BURLINGAME—the man who proclaim ed that " the times demand an anti-slavery Constitution, an anti-slavery BIBLE, and an , anti-slavery GOD "—was • here, at the Fre mont Mass Meeting, on Wednesday last, and gave several shrieks fur Freedom and Free Niggers. To say that in his harangues in the afternoon and evening he used any argument, would be an insult to the intelligence of those who listened to him. His whole effort, from beginning to end, was an appeal to the passions and prejudices, not to the judgments of his audience. We had the old stale slang about the " clanking of chain" and the " lash of the slave-holder." We had honeyed words in abundance, all intended to cloak the real de_ signs of the Abolition filction. Piteous ap peals were made for " bleeding Kansas "—all for the purpose (illy concealed). of trying to divert the attention of our people from the unholy and wicked doctrines that lie at the foundation of their organization. And even, at times, this blasphemous Infidel talked piously of the Christian religion and the doc trines of the Bible! and several of his pious hearers would ever and anon show their ap probation of his hypocritical remarks by shouting and stamping! We should have no objection if the Fremon ters would get this Infidel Yankee orator back again to Lancaster, and keep him here until after the election. We are satisfied his presence and speeches would add hundreds of votes to our State ticket and to Mr. Bucusivert at the ensuing State and Presideniial elections. CITY AND COUNTY ITEMS THE DISUNIONISTS IN COUNCIL! SAM SWALLOWED BY SAMBO ! A Great Noise and much Wool! Wednesday laSt was an epoch in the history of Lancaster county: ono that deserves to live enterer in story and in song. Never, within the lut half century. was there seen upon Unproductive soil st)ch an assemblage of political tricksters and knaveish-minded men. A great feat of leger- demain was to be accomplished, and to do it all he ac complished charlatans in the county were summoned to the field. Black spirits and white, blue spirits and grey, men of every political hue, shade and color, were impor tuued..coaxed and bribed to take part in the august affair. The whole county woe summoned to witness the conversion of the great Whie party to the new faith of Abolitionism. For the last four weeks every nook and corner of the county wee explored by scaly-looking adventurers:—every fellow who bad strength and meanness enough to blow a three cent Lute horn wits employed to visit the people and urge them to attend the GREAT - MASS MEETING! Yankee school masters and sweet smelling Babes of Grace from the land of wooden nutmegs,—brieflees lawyers and quack doctors,—Maine Law fanatics and Abolition tract distributors,—measly pork inspectors and lantern Jaw'd horse jockeys, were engaged In hunting up the lame, the halt and the blind, and persuading them to attend the GREAT MASS MEETING ! Huge posters printed In the largest kind of type, and embellished with a hairy representation of the Woolly Horse, appealed to the people. Whigs, Democrats and Amer icans ; Sam, Smut* and Muster, to join in the grand caval cade that was going to offend the GREAT MA S MEETING! Men from abroad,—men of giant height and goddik intellect,—men who could mould the popular mind as the Totter moulds his clay were promised to be to attendance. and harangue the people at the GREAT MASS MEETING Burlingame and Wilmot, Tom Corwin and 'not Juhn Smith, Ford and Reeder, and even the small end of the once famous Tape Worm Stevens, were advertised to be exhibited to the gaping crowd, without money and without price, at the GREAT MASS MEETING: Well, the day for the great Moss Meeting Conn!. as greet days will Come, and therefore It becomes us, as a faithful observer and recorder of passing Crests, to give our resters Isome idea of what we saw and what we heard. At early dawn the tramping of horses' feet and the heat ing of drums gave token to the weary end yet nnSillintfitut sleeper, that the prelude to great show was about com mencing. Eager to be among the first lookers on, we vett lured forth and beheld a sight grander than over crossed the vision of the world's great dreamer, Bunyan. In front of the National House, drawn up in martial array. stood a file of horsemen, in holiday attire. Decked out in ribbons, red, white and blue, with tawdry sashes and dilapidated lute, they were the simplest looking set of fellows thAt eye ever saw or ear ever heard tell of. Since the time that the redoubtable John Falstaff reviewed hie comp:soy near the bloody field of Shrewsbury, until the present day, DO roe hath seen such scare -crows% Had the immortal Barnum been able to catch and cage there, at s penny n sight, he would retrieve his fallen tortenes in a twelve month. After exhibiting themselves a sufficient length of time, and chat. longing the admiration of idle school boys sad red arni'd chamber maids, the Chief 51arshal, his side unit adjuncts moved on amid the breathless silence of the ad miring crowd. Arriving In Centre Square, another halt was called I, give the barber boys and huckster women assembled there on opportunity of witnessing the imposing pageent. These satisfied, the cortege moved on to eseort the delegations into town. First came the delegations from Manheim, Warwick and Mount Joy, composed of several hundred men and half as many women and boys. They manifested but little en thusiasm, while their banners bore tame and spiritless devices and mottoes. Among these delegations we obse, veil several old line Whigs, who looked, an we ever imagined aman might look who was caught in a very use,,,, and des. picable'act. The loudest freedom ehilekers in this crowd were several old stagers, who have grown grey and become spavined in their hunt for office. They have boxed every point of the political compass, and if niggerism fails them now, they are gone forever. Acting as one of the Marshals was our good looking friend Lori, of Warwick. lie looked quite as woolly, only a little more sheepish than he did when they slaughtered him at the Negro County.conven tion, which lately assembled at Fulton Rail. Hold on Levi —when you have once solved the problem of how the milk gets into the cocoa nut, you may ha elected-as a Legislator. After these delegations had passed. came the one from Elizabethtown, embodied in a solitary old stager who, Mr the last fifteen years, has been a standing candidate for Recorder. He is a broad-shouldered, big-faced specimen of humanity, who gives many and awful shrieks for free Kansas and free niggers. Upon this occasion he was con soling himself by reading the "Sorrows of Welter," and listening to the advice of Dr. Markley and the ghost of the Express. Next in order came the Manor delegation and . the Mil lerstown Union Club, composed mainly of the friends of Fillmore. This delegation made up in noise what they lacked In numbers, and proved themselves shriekers of no ordinary kind. John Brady, the American Eagle Orator, of Millersville, was the Marshal, and, to his own,opinion. the greatest man upon the ground that day. Space will not allow us to enumerate or mention all the delegations as they arrived. The lower suctio9 of the county, particularly those townships where nlggerism flourishes like a green bay tree, sent their howlertt in con siderable numbers. But while the fanatics of the South were thus represented, the cool-headed, conservative Union loving men of the Northern townships were nut in attend ance. Penn and Rapho, Elizabeth and Clay, the Bonegals, Ithe Cocalicos, Ephrata and Brecknock, the bortitughs of Marietta, Columbia, Strasburg and Manheim, had few, if any, of their citizens in the ranks. The freemeni of these townships and boroughs have ever been distinguished fur their hatred of sectionalism, and their opposition lb fanati cism, and the 2nd Tuesday of October will prove that they remain steadfast to their principles and their faith:. The great feature of the day, however, was the Sillisbury delegation, composed of donkeys in harness and 0001,y5 In broad cloth,—follows who at a free shriek or it a free ink are not to be beat, even In the great Stale of •Var- mount.' Most of the delegation carried a little: muslin .anner in their hands, and a booby's head In their hats.— The hair on the head of many was curled so tight that they ould not shut their eyes, and thus, from necessity, they ere kept shrieking for freedom: The -Marshal was a arrow-minded, bigoted, brick-top woolly head, rejoicing n the euphonious title of Fool Nat. The delegations having been safely escorted Into city, reatly to the pleasure of children, and the Chief Narshnl •nd hie aide, were allowed au hour's time to recuperate after which they were formed into line and marched to the place of meeting. We shall not take the trouble toirecapit. plate the appearance on foot of the various delegations, but hall only say that the number of persons in line, 'as they passed the corner of East King and Duke streets, was about rine thousand. Arriving at the place of meeting we found lh stand decorated with banners, flags and evergreens, while high "above them all waved the Disunion Flag of the Freitenters. rhie flag contained 31 stars, but divided by a wfde line eaving the 16 stars representing the Free States upon one side, and the 15 stars representing the Slave Stags upon the other. It was a sad sight to see In this mirden of America.,—this land of Fenn,—the black flag of secession ‘‘ml disunion milled over the heads of a LancasteriCounty Audience. But such was the fact, and we blush to virite it. iAfter 'the organization of the meeting, the 401:l. Mr. Hamlin, of Maine, was introduced to the crowd arffi spoke :for about two hours. Ills whole speech was a 4soue of falsehood and misrepresentation in regard to the causes 'Which led to the difficulties in Kansas, and alsoregard hi the democracy of Jefferson an I Jackson. The miserable Old renegade knew he was lying, and hundreds of 41s ars knew it as well. The only thing original which:the old 'Political weathercock said, was when he told the' crowd that if they but looked at him they could easily she that, so far as he was concerned, he was a real black rep4blican. The audience understood the bit, and this time ,ut the laugh and hurrah in at the right place. Finally, after a great flourish of trumpets and blowing of noses, during which Bart :I:iieffer burst his Moots and Omrge Markley cried amen, the great Mr. Burllngat rn e took the stand. His harangue was in the usual style— I bo imst and fustian, and exciting the envy of all the college boys and boarding school misses on the ground. A reporter, from New York, on the stand, mid he had repated the lame stuff three times before, and he would be d , +l . if he Tould do It again. When he concluded, the multituile gave even shrieks for free Kansas and free 'riggers, arid. then Left the ground. Notice having been extensively circulated that: David Wilmot would be present and address a meeting at• Fulton ilall, In the evening, a large number of perspos assembled to bear him. But when the hour arrived for °perking the meeting it was found that Mr. Wilmot was not present.— Although this was a sere disappointment the audibi;ce bore patiently and listened to another two hours' ha'rangue from the man that challenged Brooks, but did no . t. fight 4im. Finally a motion was made by somebody, who was ashamed to show his face, that Thaddeus Stevens iiddress the meeting. Tho motion was put and carried, and:with a "Lump, thump, Thump, lump," the old heathen took the stand. Thus far we have written in a spirit of pleasantry and goal will, and are willing to bear testimony to the bourte. ons and manly bearing of Messrs. Hamlin and Burlipgamo. Whatever they may be politically, socially they aro gentle men and acquainted with the requirements of decent so ciety. But truth and propriety alike demand that we notice the speech of Stevens as it deserves. A more dis gusting, malicious and offensive harangue never fell from the lips of any decent man. From first to last, It was couched in language which no man but Stevens could ate °sive, and no man bat Stevens give expression to.' How any man, claiming to be respectable, could endorse it:passes our comprehension; and yet Axrnoxr E. Itookars and BILLY WRIGHT were loud In their applause. The ;whole vocabulary of Billingsgate slang was exhausted, ere the black hearted maligner of Jawas BUCHANAN took tiff seat. If, In the lowest sink of moral depravity, there be onp man fo l und more vile and degraded than hie fellows, that man can justly claim to be the peer of Thaddeus Stevens. A tiling and moving mass of political infamy and ;moral corruption, he stinks In the nostrils of every decent man. Let the unclean thing alone. DISTINGUISHED VISITOR.—Sir Henry 401- 1,,,,,d, physician to the Queen of England, was a visitor at Wheatland, Mr. Buchanan's residence, on Wedneedaj• lest. DIE FENCIBLES.—The Fencibles, Calitain Decnitaa commanding, made a full dross parade on 'ester d' afternoon. Tim KEYSTON2 Ctun.—This. noble body of Democrats, of Philadelphia, will be present at our. Mass Heating, to-mcurow, In full force. They will be iscopmpa by Beck's celebrated Band. ARRANGEIviCENTS roa THE GRAND MASSjIEETING , ON WEDN AY. PROGRAMME Chief Marshal,—Col. MRCS CAII3LANT. Aida.—Major T. H. Pearce, ChasJ AL Howell. Assistant Marshals,—H. Hambright, Wm. Cog, H. Schaum, M. U. Locher, Richard McGrann, Jr., Leah Hal dy, Joseph Altic, Jacob Foltz, Capk Joe, Somers, H. Mc• Lenegan, J. W. Mackley, Ju0..1. .r.sialeman, Jacob Hart man. Jarob Herzog, M. H. Wearer. Charles IL Fralley, W. H. Mi 1, H. M. Rawlins, Dr. J.l. Raker,- Wm. S. Am weir, S. H. Reynolds, 11. Nagle, John Reese, Parker Spring and George W. 13,,,vu. GENERAL ORDERS The City Delegation and Wheatland Club. will form at the head of North Queen street, aft 9 o'clock, 1. M. All the delegations from the North. New 11011,md turnpike. and from the Railroad East and West, (con aaa ti whi d,) will meet them at J a m es wrest, and fall into line. Then pas in a body, slowly down North Queen street. to Centre Square, where all the delegations from Eastand West, con centrated at the heads of East King and West King streets, will fall lute line ; then down South Queen street, when all the delegations from the South, corrtrated at the head street, South Queen strt, will fall into ine as the main procee eon passes up Middle street to Ens King. All the delegations being in line,ithe following route will be taken, viz .—Down King to Charlotte, up Charlotte to Chesnut, down Chesnut to North Queen, up N. Queen to Centre Square and dismiss. The Procesalon, (all on foot excepi. Marshala,) will again form at I o'clock, P. M., ha East King street, the right resting on Centre Square, and march. out,Weet King to Charlotte, up Charlotte to Orange, down Orange to Duke, up Duke to the Orchard, where addresses will be delivered. ASSISTANT SI ARSH/L..S' ORDERS All Assistant 31arshals ar. to repdrt themselves at Head Quarters, (J. & I). Reese's Ilotol,) at 7 o'clock, A. M., when they will take their stations ae follows: First Divialeu.—llambright and Cox,—PLank Road Del egations. cham and Locher,—Harrisburg Turn• pike. 3lrOrann, Foltz and Fralley,—Utiz and Reading Turniike. Somers and Spring,—New Holland Turnpike. 1 Reese, lialdy and Herzog,—Locomottve Rorke. Baker . • Baker and Cagle,—llarrisburg Turn- (Railro.ict.) The above Marehal;;Sl COLICOO rate their Delegatlo. corner James end N. Queen sts. Second Division.—Reynolds, McLenegan and Moakley.— Philadelphia Turnpike. The above Divilkion will fall into lllue at•Centre Square. Third. Division.—Altic and lbertutan.—Millerstown Road. Amweg and Itawlins,--Columbia Turn pike. Wearer and Brown.—Marlette Turn • pike. The above Division will fall into Hue at Centre Square. Fourth Division .—KslileinanstiNiller,—ltuck Road. This division will fall Into li no, at3llddle, in S. Queen Street. The Delegations coming from the East in the can will stop at the Lancaster Locomotive Works. The Delegations Boni the Weo firers will stop at Ilan risturg Pike. - Both the above Delegations will; remain at the places mentioned until they are met by the Marshals. By order of CYRUS CARM.ANY, Chief Marshal. The WIIEATLAND CLUB, and all other Democrats of the City, will meet in' front of the City Hall, on toonorrow (WEDNESDAY) 'minting, nt a o'clock, for the purpose of marching to the heastof North Queen street, to join in the general procession. •! A MENDS.—In our last wiek'a iesue, in no ticing Rev. Mr. Locke's Female Inethute, we, unlninten• tionally, did Injustice to the professional standing of a lady of tine talents, and highly esteemed by our citizens, and who has been, until lately. a tracker in the school. The article in question wits furnished its by a friend, and was pul•lished without our being aware. of the misrepreeenta. lions it contained. Baying been tint W pesseasion of the fart: of the eime we cheerfully make this 'correction. We understand that Miss Wright. the lady referred to, is about to give lessons in Music and Drawing, and Wo trust she will receive the encouragement which, from her well known ability, she so well deserves. DinliAliOn Boldly *vowed I At the Black Republican Mass Meeting held in this City, on Wednesday last, there was one banner displayed which should, of itself, be sufficient to oink the party beyond hope of redemption, and which was!an outrage to the community in which it was exhibited. We allude to the Disunion Flag, curried for a time in the procession, and subsequently fastened to the Platform on the left Hide of the Speak ers' stand. The flag was a field of cloth with thirty-one stars upon it, bearing the semblance and intended-to represent Ithe "Flab; of our Union." But this "National Flag" of the Black Republicans had drawn through its centre, from top to bottom] a pale stripe of opsr „14440 inches wide, on one aide of which were SIXTEEN and on the other FIFTEEN STARS!! Yes, Citizens of Lancaster County and of Pennsylvania, the Black Republicans, emboldened by the presence of their Preaching Infidel Missionaries from Maine and Massa chusetts, ventured upon the &secretion of the Flag of our glorious Union; by drawing the broad line of separation through the centre! _ Gracious Heaven, has it dome to this—that here in the old City of Lancaster—the early home of Revolutionary Heroes and Patriots, and the present home of the great standard bearer, who proudly floats upon the banner of the People, whose candidate he is, the glor- ious inscription, "OUR UNION—IT MUST AND SHALL BE PRESERVED!" .That here, in Lan caster, where canting hypocrites profess to be the disciples of WASHINGTON, and have made their candidate insult the memory of the great Father of his Country, by promising "to walk in HIS foot steps," they have dared, in open day, to erect "THIi BLACK FLAG OF DISUNION ! !" Hovering over the corner of the platform, like a thing conscious of•its loathsome aspect, the Hon. Hannibal Hamlin, of the great "liquor law" Stite of Maine, and the right Honorable DUELIST Burlingame, stood beside and upheld the infamy and treas. on it portrayed, by harangues of hours in length, for the purpose of enlightening the benighted citizens of Lancaster County ! Such men pretend to be the disciples and followers of GEORGE WASHINGTON ! Shame, shame upon such . a gross profanation of his name and principles. WASHINGTON'S Farewell Address has, doubt less, been oftentimes read by, most of our peo ple. His wise counsels so solemnly impressed upon his countrymen, in that incomparable paper, ought never to be forgotten or neglected. T hey arc invaluable at the present moment ! lie warns his countrymen .against the wiles and artifices of bad men in future, who will assail the stability of the UNION. His voice and counsel were prophetic-Lthose times and those men are now upon In speaking of our UNION as "the palladium of the political safety and prosperity of the people," he utters the following solemn words of command: iger• "Discountenance whatever may sug gest even a suspicion that it :[the U.stoN] can be abandoned! And indignantly frown upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our Country from, the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link to• gether the various parts." —FM( This was the counsel and command contain ed in the Farewell Address of the "Father of his Country" to his children; It was deliver ed on the 17th of September, 1796—sixty years ago, and when our UNton, as it now exists under the CONSTITUTION, was nine years old. Yet, now at this day, when universal prosperity and happiness prevails among our people under the working of that Constitution and that Union, the leaders of the Black Republi can—Fremont party—professing to be follow ers of WASIIINGTON, have raised a flag in our midst bearing thirty-one Stars, purporting to represent the whole thirty. One States in the Union, with a broad stripe dt..stinelly drawn, having on one side of it SIXTEEN and on the other FIFTEEN stars. Yes ! there stood the mutilated constellation of ourglorious stars— clearly marking a separation of the States ! It was a bold venture—but Would not win. The exhibition of that flag has lost the party that supports it thousands ofvotes. - Several of the most respectable suppoiters of Mr. Fill more, should lie be a candidate, have declared that the Black Republicans will lose at least five hundred votes in this county, at our Octo ber election, by the infamous exposure of their "cloven foot "on Wednesday-last !In truth, if we can judge from the murmurs of discontent heard on the day of its exposure, and the looks and actions pervading our reflecting masses since, that " disunion flag " tiro put the black seal upon all the hopes of Brack Republican ism this quarter. To be sure, " the flag " was stealthily taken from the Stand, near the close 'of the meeting, in obedience to secret orders, land not after wards exposed in the Procession t But it was too late—the polluted thing hid been seen- by too many, and nothing is left but to face the music of Disunion. God save Fremont Black Republicanism from Re— '